The link to fertility rates
Based on my observations over a number of years...fertility is a direct function of these structural issues.
I hear folks talk about infertility a lot these days.
Just the other day I was listening to it being discussed on a podcast.
And fertility is one of those secondary patterns that I have been paying attention to for many years. Whenever I am with friends or someone is talking about being infertile, my ears perk up.
I look at their structure (eg. the shape of their skull, their body, the quality of their profile). And I aim to refute my current hypothesis that infertility is almost completely a function of structure.
And surprise, surprise… I never do. They always end up fitting the pattern.
Let’s dive into this topic today.
Fertility rates have been plummeting in the US
The numbers are pretty shocking - fertility rates have dropped by over 50% since the 1960s.
In 2023, we're at about 1.6 births per woman, well below the replacement rate of 2.1.
But here's what's really wild - it's not just women having trouble conceiving. Male sperm counts have dropped by more than 50% in the past 40 years. That's pretty crazy! And it's accelerating.
Why do they say this is happening?
The "experts" love to blame all kinds of things - chemicals in our food, plastics, people waiting longer to have kids, stress, etc. For men, they point to things like tight underwear and laptops heat killing sperm.
For women, they talk about career stress and waiting too long to start families.
But I don’t buy any of that. Humans have been dealing with stress forever.
A person in Europe today is most likely a lot less stressed than one living in 1939 on the cusp of World War II.
And our ancestors definitely weren't wearing loose underwear. Something else is going on here.
Why do I think this is happening?
To me it is so blaringly obvious that it is these biomechanics I talk about, which literally twist your entire skeleton and displaces all your organs.
And guess what? Your reproductive organs are particularly vulnerable to this.
Think about it - for women, the uterus, ovaries, and fallopian tubes are all soft tissue structures that need proper positioning to function. When your pelvis gets twisted from these biomechanics, these organs get compressed and displaced.
For men, the same thing happens to the testicles and the whole hormonal system.
This structural collapse process screws with everything - blood flow, hormone production, organ function. It's like trying to run a factory where all the machines have been pushed out of alignment.
I don't think you can be infertile if you have good structure
I've been paying attention to this pattern for years now. Every single person I've known who struggled with fertility had obvious structural issues - eg. poor profile, incorrect body proportions, etc.
Whereas the people I’d come across that had very good structure never seemed to have any fertility issues.
Don’t believe me?
I challenge you to find me someone with perfect structure (think professional athlete or model-level development) who's infertile. I pay attention to this stuff for years and I don’t remember a single case.
It’s when you see the same patterns day after day, month after month, year after year that you realize…. “wait a minute. This pattern cannot be this damn tight if there was not direct causation involved.”
If we don't figure this out most humans will be infertile
This is probably the most direct threat to humanity from these biomechanics. Each generation is worse than the previous as I discussed in this article.
And fertility rates are dropping accordingly.
We're already seeing population decline in many developed countries. But unless we understand these biomechanics better, it's going to get way worse.
Think about it - a mother with poor structure gives birth to a child who starts life already somewhat compressed. The teeth don’t extrude right, the jaw and skull develop to a fraction of what they were supposed to, and the entire spine is twisted right out of the gates. Then only gets worse over the course of that child’s life.
So that child grows up with even worse structure than their mom, and has an even harder time conceiving. It's a downward spiral.
Closing thoughts
The medical establishment is spending billions trying to solve infertility with hormones and IVF. But they're missing the forest for the trees.
You can pump someone full of hormones all day long, but if their organs are physically compressed and displaced, it's not going to fix the problem.
I predict that in the future, we'll look back at this period and realize how obvious it was. Just like we now understand that washing your hands prevents infection, we'll understand that proper structural development is key to fertility.
But will we figure this out before fertility rates drop a lot further?
That's the real question. Because right now, we're heading toward a future where natural conception might become the exception rather than the rule.
In my simple view - your body isn't designed to be infertile. It's designed to reproduce. If it can't, something fundamental has gone wrong with your structure.
Infertility runs in my family, lol... Both grandmothers, in the 1920s, had trouble conceiving and had unusually small families. My mother had a lot of trouble - many miscarriages, so I was an only child. I had a bad horse fall which displaced the only functioning ovary, so I only had one child. So this article may explain my family's dwindling birthrate. Thank you for offering a logical and fascinating theory, EGK!